Spam maker Hormel to buy Skippy peanut butter from Unilever

Hormel, maker of lunch meats and Spam canned ham, said it will buy the Skippy peanut butter brand for about $700 million.

Hormel, maker of lunch meats and Spam canned ham, said it will buy the Skippy peanut butter brand for about $700 million. (Unilever / Facebook)

Tiffany Hsu

Lunch meat purveyor Hormel Foods is making a run at the supermarket's middle aisles, buying the Skippy peanut butter brand for about $700 million.

The Austin, Minn., company, also known for its Spam canned ham, is acquiring Skippy from Unilever's U.S. operation, which also owns brands such as Vaseline and I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter!

Hormel, whose main strength is its domestic sales of Jennie-O, Farmer John and other lunch meats, is trying to expand its portfolio of products and boost its presence overseas.

Skippy, said Hormel Chief Executive Jeffrey M. Ettinger in a conference call with analysts, “will become one of our biggest brands.”

Introduced in 1932, Skippy is the second-largest peanut butter brand in the U.S., trailing only Jif, which is owned by the J.M. Smucker Co. The peanut butter industry is worth $2 billion, according to Hormel.

Nearly three quarters of U.S. households eat peanut butter, the key component in the second-most popular American sandwich, Hormel says.

Skippy was introduced in 1932 and sells 11 varieties of peanut butter. It’s currently the top peanut butter brand in China – a “focus market” for Hormel for more than a decade, Ettinger said – and is also sold in more than 30 other countries.

Hormel said it expects Skippy to bring in annual sales of $370 million, nearly $100 million of that from abroad.

Ettinger emphasized Skippy’s leading role in the market for natural peanut butter, which he said makes up a quarter of domestic peanut butter sales. He also noted Hormel’s efforts to break into side dishes and Mexican food.

The deal gives Hormel control of Skippy manufacturing facilities in Little Rock, Ark., and Weifang, China. After regulatory approval, the transaction is expected to close early this year.